What if your Web Applications could protect themselves?

To better protect against cyberattacks, it’s not enough to find and fix application vulnerabilities during development and testing. You also have to block malicious activity against applications already in production. Runtime Application Self-Protection, or RASP, is an emerging technology that helps detect and stop these common attacks in real time.

Join this webcast to learn:

• Emerging trends in web application security from our leading experts
• Why detecting attacks from inside the application matters
• How to integrate runtime protection in your development and DevOps processes
• How Veracode Runtime Application Self-Protection can work for you

If you’re leveraging AWS, there’s a very good chance that you are considering how to embrace AWS’s breadth of services designed to enable developers and IT operations professionals practicing DevOps to rapidly and safely deliver software. We provide examples of how to accelerate your development in AWS, whilst offering insights into how you can make your code secure with Veracode. Automation all the way.

Open source code is everywhere, helping developers deliver code quickly and efficiently. All software innovations are happening in open source, from Artificial Intelligence to Augmented Reality and Cryptocurrencies. But, if those open source components are insecure, the result can be a catastrophic data breach. To prevent this from happening, companies are turning to Software Composition Analysis (SCA) solutions to identify vulnerabilities in the open source libraries they’re using.

Join Veracode to learn how your development teams can easily identify open source libraries in use, their vulnerabilities, licenses, and risks to their applications – helping you protect both your applications and customer data. Want to learn more about the new Veracode product? Register today!

With the Financial Industry issuing regulations addressing cybersecurity and information security controls, companies are increasingly holding their software vendors accountable for meeting standard application security policies. However, many of these organizations are still dealing with manual processes and arduous penetration testing. This results in minimal documentation of these regulations- putting them and their suppliers at risk of noncompliance, and worse, of breach.

Hear Chris Wysopal, Chief Technology Officer and Co-Founder at Veracode provide tips on how to navigate key financial compliance requirements and regulations through application security and secure development. Some of his discussion points will include:

•The impact of recent major regulations – the EU General Data Protection Regulation (EU GDPR) and NY State Department of Financial Services (NY DFS) Cybersecurity Regulations - on application security standards and secure development practices
•How to get started with secure development practices in order to effectively navigate these requirements
•How to build a software development process that has continuous security, is measurable, and is transparent

Metrics are critical for measuring and expanding an application security program. However, executives don't always want to see a slew of complicated charts and graphs - they want one simple number that answers, in a nutshell, is this program working?

Join us for a webinar with Anne Nielsen, Sr. Product Manager, Reporting & Strategy at Veracode, as we discuss our metric recommendation and dive into reporting best practices and tips for success.

The path to a secure software development environment may seem like an intimidating one, but there’s no reason to fret. There’s no shame in starting small and simple – after all, you need to prove value before you can mature your program over time. But, what are the concrete steps can you take to get to a mature state of software security?

Serverless code is dramatically changing how teams think about deploying software. The economics of Serverless has transformed how functionality can be leveraged to serve the customer. Of course, whilst code survives at run time, it needs to be secure - especially when dealing with user input from the outside world. We discuss how you can keep your Lambdas absolutely mint, free from vulnerabilities with Veracode.

Join this webinar to...

-Understand the security challenges in building and deploying of serverless architecture in production.
-Learn how to use and secure a python/nodejs based project
-See the impact of uncovering new previously unreported security issues in 1st and 3rd party components.

Picture the scene - your CEO observes the latest headlines about a competitor being breached. A single text message comes into the inbox of the person most likely to be able to answer the question. ‘Tell me Joe this couldn’t happen to us, are all out sites secure?’ - Learn how any team could look an Exec in the eye, knowing that they’ve scanned multiple websites in parallel, without breaking their stride.

Join this live webinar to learn...

-How to discover your external facing inventory
-How to take that information and determine a risk assessment
-Why scale, speed and automation are key

As organisations demand better, faster, and more efficient software, developers are scrambling to keep up and are often turning towards vulnerable open source code components – a practical solution, but one that can put your company at risk to cyber-attacks.

Open source software risks revolve around three key areas: visibility, security, and governance. In this session we will help you understand these factors and how to formulate a stronger cybersecurity strategy that protects you from open source risk.

Join us for this live webinar where we will be joined by Swiss Technology Partner, PSYND, to learn how Veracode can help you gain visibility of open source risk and formulate a stronger cybersecurity strategy that protects you from related cyber attacks.PSYND will present us with real life examples and use cases which illustrate just how important it is for organisations to secure their code.

The most important function of an application security program is effectively fixing flaws once they’re discovered. But the speed of that fix rate matters — the time it takes for attackers to come up with exploits for newly discovered vulnerabilities is measured in days, and sometimes hours. Yet our most recent State of Software Security report found that one in four high and very high severity flaws aren’t addressed within 290 days of discovery.

Improving your fix rate is critical, but the sheer volume of vulnerabilities present in most organizations’ application portfolios makes it necessary for them to make daily tradeoffs between security, practicality, and speed.

This might seem like an insurmountable problem, but our data also presents hopeful glimpses at potential prioritization and software development methods that could help organizations reduce risk more quickly. In this session, we’ll share some steps and best practices that will start lowering your fix rate.

About the speakers:
Pejman Pourmousa is Vice President of Services at Veracode, where he is responsible for the successful adoption of Veracode’s solutions by its customers. He has spent the last seven years building cohesive teams that help customers develop, deploy and mature their App Sec programs. Using his depth of experience, he guides top leaders of organizations on how to realize the potential of their application security programs. Pejman has spent the entirety of his career in the area of services management and delivery specifically around Compliance, Risk and Security.

Amy DeMartine is the Research Director at Forrester Research and helps security, risk professionals transform their current software, and application security practices to support continuous delivery and improvement, focusing on strong partnerships with application development, operations, and business teams.

It’s more common than you think that organizations and brands have more web apps than they realize. In fact, Veracode customers often find roughly 30 per cent more applications than they knew about. With one project Veracode worked on for a high street bank in the UK, they discovered 1,800 websites that had yet to be logged.

There are a number of reasons unknown or unlogged web applications continue to live in your portfolio. For example, through M&A activity, more than just a company or brand is acquired – you also acquire their web assets. Further, the digital landscape is decorated with marketing promotional sites meant to attract attention. And the very thing meant to draw attention to your brand and boost your bottom line is the same target attackers go after to infiltrate your organization.

Join this session to learn how to uncover unknown web applications in your portfolio to ensure their security from cyberattackers.

About the speaker:
Bipin Mistry is Director of Product Management for WAS product line. Prior to joining CA/Veracode he was VP Product Management for NEC/Netcracker in their SDN/NFV and Security business unit. At NEC/Netcracker Bipin’s primary focus is to develop solutions and architectures specifically mapped to NFV/SDN and Orchestration. He has over 28 years expertise in Security, Software Architectures, Mobile and Core Networking Technologies, Product Management, Marketing, Engineering and Sales. Prior to joining NEC/Netcracker Bipin was VP President of Product Management for a security startup in the field of DDoS analysis and mitigation. Bipin has also held architectural and management roles at both Juniper Networks (Chief Mobile Architect) and Cisco Systems (Sr. Director of SP Architecture).

Bipin lives Shrewsbury MA with his wife and 2 children. In his spare time, Bipin is a keen runner and is currently attempting to learn Spanish.

Open source frameworks have changed the business world in profound ways. They’ve ushered in a level of speed, innovation, and convenience that significantly alters the IT equation. With large numbers of developers and others contributing to a project, it’s possible to advance and evolve software in ways that wouldn’t have been imaginable in the past. What’s more, this form of open collaboration benefits everyone by making software available at a lower cost point — and sometimes even at no cost.

Make no mistake, open source software libraries are here to stay – and they can introduce new and sometimes dangerous risks to an enterprise. The use of open source code increases the number of users affected as well as the number of exposure points. It’s vital to have a strategy and framework in place to manage open source libraries and components. Otherwise, the road to digital transformation will likely be paved with frustrations, problems, and even failures.

Open source software risks revolve around three key areas: visibility, security, and governance.

In this session we will help you understand these factors and how to formulate a stronger cybersecurity strategy that protects you from open source risk.

One of the most powerful things an organization can do to improve its security posture is to cultivate security-mindedness in its developers. Security and development teams often feel at odds with one another and yet they share a common goal: to put quality code into production. Bringing these teams into closer contact gives them a deeper understanding of each other’s pressures, priorities, and processes.

Developers are well-positioned to address application security. By designing applications with security in mind, and finding and fixing flaws early in the software development lifecycle, developers shift security left. In doing so they both lighten the burden on the security team and reduce unplanned work for themselves down the road.

An interested developer—given the right direction, encouragement, and tools—can become an effective security champion.

Join this session to learn how to identify the right developers for this role and how to best train and support them over time. Your security champions will advocate for security as a non-negotiable component of code quality and in turn foster security-mindedness in their peers, amplifying security knowledge across the organization.

About the speaker: Ryan O’Boyle is a Principal Security Researcher at Veracode, and a certified ScrumMaster. Prior to joining Veracode, he helped create the internal penetration testing team at Fidelity Investments, where he was focused not only on finding vulnerabilities but helping engineers fix them and avoid them altogether.

Although there are a variety of application security technologies, there is no silver bullet. You need to gather the strengths of multiple analysis techniques along the entire application lifetime — from development to testing to production — to drive down application risk. Each testing type, from static to dynamic to software composition analysis and manual pen testing, has different strengths and weaknesses and are better in different scenarios, but you won’t be effective without taking advantage of them all.

Join this session to understand the strengths and weaknesses of the different AppSec testing types, how they work together, and how to get started.

About the speaker:
Chris Kirsch works on the products team at Veracode and has 22 years of experience in security, particularly in the areas of application security testing, security assessments, incident response, and cryptography. Previously, he managed Metasploit and incident response solutions at Rapid7 and held similar positions at Thales e-Security and PGP Corporation. He is the winner of the Social Engineering CTF Black Badge competition at DEF CON 25.

The demands of modern software development and the rise of DevOps are shifting security left into the early phases of the development lifecycle. Companies that navigate this significant cultural, organizational, and technological change well are outpacing their competitors. But where to begin?

In this session, we will describe five essential steps for shifting security left:

Equipped with this guidance you can begin to make the changes that will transform application security into a responsibility that is shared by development and security and that continues once applications are in production and operation. By shifting security left, you unburden your security team, empower your developers to write better code from the start, and deliver stronger, better applications than your competitors.

About the speaker:
Chris Wysopal is Chief Technology Officer at Veracode. He oversees technology strategy and information security. Prior to co-founding Veracode in 2006 Veracode, Chris was vice president of research and development at security consultancy @stake, which was acquired by Symantec.

In the 1990’s, Chris was an original vulnerability researcher at The L0pht, a hacker think tank, where he was one of the first to publicize the risks of insecure software. He has testified to the US Congress on the subjects of government security and how vulnerabilities are discovered in software.

Chris received a BS in computer and systems engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He is the author of The Art of Software Security Testing.

Chris is often called upon to download the latest Minecraft mods for his 6-year-old son. An avid photographer and nature-lover, Chris spends his free time hiking conservation trails near his home outside Boston.

Hear from a leading DevSecOps expert with first-hand knowledge and experience in building and expanding enterprise-wide application security programs. This webinar will feature Colin Domoney, formerly of Veracode and now a consultant to companies transforming to the DevOps model of software delivery. Colin will discuss how to engage with your company’s decision makers in order to expand your application security program. Specifically he will share best practices on getting buy-in from internal stakeholders, tips for identifying demonstrable KPI’s, and examples of how other companies have made the successful transition of application security footprint to a mature program.

Application security is more than breach avoidance - it can be your competitive differentiator. The sobering threat of data breaches has raised concern within organizations around the software running in their environments and touching their businesses. Software vendors who can prove that their applications will not leave their customers open to attack can claim a competitive advantage.

Attend this upcoming webinar, and hear Veracode experts share insights into how enterprises are using security to drive business growth from within. Specifically you will learn how security can drive revenue growth through:

The Cloud Native Computing Foundation is home to literally hundreds of projects enabling developers to embrace every benefit of cloud native development from container deployment and orchestration to monitoring and messaging.

This webinar gives an overview of the work of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation; highlights a few flagship projects such as Kubernetes and Istio; and explains how these projects are transforming the way developers work. Security practitioners will benefit from insights into how these new technologies and projects can be applied to ensure that cloud native applications are also natively secure by design.

In this live webinar we’ll talk about the wonderful opportunity afforded by Open Source software to accelerate development productivity. With up to 90% of modern software being comprised from third party components, it’s important to understand how secure building blocks really are. Public vulnerability databases only reveal part of the story.

Veracode shines a light on how we use Machine Learning to identify everything else. For modern languages, the results are astounding. By mining open source software repositories we are able to automatically identify vulnerabilities and security issues before they are widely known.

Join this live webinar to...

-Learn how to use machine learning (ML) to automate the task of identifying vulnerabilities in open-source software.
-Understand the engineering challenges in building and deploying ML models at scale in production.
-See the impact of uncovering new previously unreported security issues in 3rd party components.

The most important function of an application security program is effectively fixing flaws once they’re discovered. But the speed of that fix rate matters — the time it takes for attackers to come up with exploits for newly discovered vulnerabilities is measured in days, and sometimes hours. Yet our most recent State of Software Security report found that one in four high and very high severity flaws aren’t addressed within 290 days of discovery.

Improving your fix rate is critical, but the sheer volume of vulnerabilities present in most organizations’ application portfolios makes it necessary for them to make daily tradeoffs between security, practicality, and speed.

This might seem like an insurmountable problem, but our data also presents hopeful glimpses at potential prioritization and software development methods that could help organizations reduce risk more quickly. In this session, we’ll share some steps and best practices that will start lowering your fix rate.

About the speakers:
Pejman Pourmousa is Vice President of Services at Veracode, where he is responsible for the successful adoption of Veracode’s solutions by its customers. He has spent the last seven years building cohesive teams that help customers develop, deploy and mature their App Sec programs. Using his depth of experience, he guides top leaders of organizations on how to realize the potential of their application security programs. Pejman has spent the entirety of his career in the area of services management and delivery specifically around Compliance, Risk and Security.

Amy DeMartine is the Research Director at Forrester Research and helps security, risk professionals transform their current software, and application security practices to support continuous delivery and improvement, focusing on strong partnerships with application development, operations, and business teams.